Davis, Reverend Gary

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'''Reverend Gary Davis,''' also known as '''Blind Gary Davis''' (April 30, 1896 – May 5, 1972), was an [[blues]] and [[gospel music|gospel]] singer, as well as a renowned guitarist. The best known example of the "[[gospel blues]]," his playing influenced several of the [[rock and roll]] legends of the 1960s.
  
'''Reverend Gary Davis''' also '''Blind Gary Davis''' ( April 30, 1896 – May 5, 1972) was an [[African American]] [[blues]] and [[gospel music|gospel]] singer as well as a renowned guitarist. His unique finger-picking style was influential on many subsequent artists and his students in [[New York City]] included [[Jorma Kaukonen]] (of [[Jefferson Airplane]] and [[Hot Tuna]]), [[Stefan Grossman]], [[Roy Book Binder]], [[Woody Mann]], and [[Ernie Hawkins]].  His musical influence, extends from the [[Grateful Dead]] and [[Bob Dylan]] to [[Keb Mo]], [[Olabelle]] and [[Resurrection Band]]. Blind Gary Davis has been regarded as a true teacher in guitar-picking styles because he used his knowledge and expertise to transform the culture of guitar playing. This teaching ideal, when regarded with the concept of initiating one's personal and spiritual transformation, requires a principled effort that expedites the art of cultural change.  
+
Born in rural [[South Carolina]], Davis was almost totally [[blindness|blind]] from infancy. He taught himself guitar at an early age and soon became an active player in the [[Piedmont blues]] scene. He was ordained as a Baptist minister in 1933, and first recorded for the American Record Company (ARC) in 1935. Davis moved with his wife, Annie Bell, to [[New York]] in 1940, where he continued teaching guitar, singing, working as a minister, and, beginning in 1945, recording on a fairly regular basis. His career reached new levels of success during the folk revival of the 1960s, and his song, "If I Had My Way," was featured on [[Peter, Paul, and Mary]]'s chart-topping debut album.
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{{toc}}
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Davis' location in [[New York City]] placed him in a position to teach a number of young musicians who went on to make a major mark in the folk and rock music scenes. His unique, virtuoso [[finger-picking]] style was influential on many subsequent artists, and his students included [[Jorma Kaukonen]], [[Stefan Grossman]], [[Dave Van Ronk]], and [[Bob Weir]]. He also had a significant impact on such artists as the [[Grateful Dead]], [[Hot Tuna]], [[Bob Dylan]], [[Keb Mo]], and [[Resurrection Band]]. Few of his students claim to have mastered his style, which is highly complex, [[creativity|creative]], and difficult to duplicate. As a singer and preacher, Davis left a legacy of hundreds of spiritual and gospel songs, while his reputation as a guitar genius served to introduce millions of young [[folk music]] fans to gospel music.
  
 
==Biography==   
 
==Biography==   
===Early life===
+
===Early years===
Born in Laurens, [[South Carolina]], Davis lost his [[sight]] at a very young age. He took to the guitar and assumed a unique multi-voice style, playing not only [[ragtime]] and blues tunes, but also traditional and original tunes in four-part harmony with a unique finger-picking guitar stylism.
+
Born in Laurens, [[South Carolina]], to John and Evelina Davis. Davis reported as an adult that his blindness resulted from a misapplication of chemicals to his eyes after birth. By the age of only three weeks he had almost completely lost the ability to see. However, he was able to distinguish light from darkness and discern shapes to a degree, but not to recognize people with his eyes alone. One of eight children, he was raised on a farm in the Piedmont section of South Carolina, the home of a particular style of blues playing also called "[[Piedmont]]." His grandmother was his primary caregiver.
  
====Fingerpicking style====
+
Gary became interested in music while still a small boy. At the age of seven, he reportedly built a guitar out of a pie pan and taught himself to play. He claims that no one taught him to play and that he "worked it all out myself." In his teenage years, Davis played at local dances and picnics, both for white and black audiences, and also sang in church. In the 1920s, he attended the Cedar Springs School for Blind People in Spartanburg, South Carolina and learned to read [[Braille]]. He also played in a local [[string band]] there.
'''"Fingerpicking"''' (also called "thumb picking", "alternating bass" or "[[pattern picking]]") is a term that is used to describe both a playing style and a genre of music. It falls under the "fingerstyle" heading because it is plucked by the fingers, but it is generally used to play a specific type of folk, country-jazz and/or blues music. In this technique, the thumb maintains a steady rhythm, usually playing "alternating bass" patterns on the lower three strings, while the index, or index and middle fingers pick out melody and fill-in notes on the high strings.  
 
  
The style originated in the late 1800s and early 1900s, as Southern African American [[blues]] guitarists tried to imitate the popular [[ragtime]] [[piano]] music of the day, with the guitarist's thumb functioning as the pianist's left hand, and the other fingers functioning as the right hand. The first recorded examples were by players such as the Reverend Gary Davis, [[Blind Blake]], [[Big Bill Broonzy]], [[Memphis Minnie]] and [[Mississippi John Hurt]]. Some early blues players such as [[Blind Willie Johnson]] and [[Tampa Red]] added [[slide guitar]] techniques. Fingerpicking was soon taken up by [[Country and Western]] artists such as [[Sam McGee]], [[Ike Everly]] (father of [[The Everly Brothers]]) and [[Merle Travis]]. Later [[Chet Atkins]] further developed the style.
+
Around this time, Davis broke his left wrist from a fall suffered when he slipped. The wrist was set improperly, and did not heal correctly. Some observers believe this condition may account for his unusual chord patterns and manner of holding the neck of his guitar. In any case, for Davis, the guitar assumed a unique, multi-voice style, playing not only [[ragtime]] and blues tunes, but also traditional and original tunes using both chordal harmonies and [[counterpoint]] with a unique finger-picking guitar style.  
  
Most fingerpickers use acoustic guitars, but some, including [[Merle Travis]] often played on hollow-body electrics.
+
Davis married in the mid 1920s and traveled throughout the Carolinas and [[Tennessee]] playing and teaching guitar to make his living. By 1927, he had settled in Durham, [[North Carolina]]. While there, Davis collaborated with a number of other artists in the [[Piedmont blues]] scene, including [[Blind Boy Fuller]] and [[Bull City Red]]. He also become more serious about [[religion]], receiving his ordination as a minister in the [[Baptist church]] in 1933. He personally founded three churches in the Durham area during this time, but separated from his wife after learning of her alleged promiscuity.
  
===Mid-life===
+
In 1935, a store manager named [[J.B. Long]] introduced Davis to the [[American Record Company]] (ARC). The subsequent recording sessions marked the beginning of Davis' larger career. It was for the ARC that Davis made his first trip to [[New York City]]. There, he recorded 15 sides in the summer of 1935. Although he recorded some secular blues songs, Davis already expressed a preference for [[gospel music]] and spirituals, although his music always showed a definite blues influence. Davis would not record again until 1945.
In the mid-1920s, Blind Gary Davis migrated to Durham, [[North Carolina]], a major center for [[African American culture|black culture]] at the time. While there, Davis collaborated with a number of other artists in the [[Piedmont blues]] scene including [[Blind Boy Fuller]] and [[Bull City Red]].  In 1935, a store manager with a reputation for supporting local artists introduced Davis (as well as Fuller and Red) to the [[American Record Company]]. The subsequent recording sessions marked the real beginning of Davis' career. It was also during his time in Durham that Davis converted to Christianity; he would later become [[ordination|ordained]] as a [[Baptists|Baptist]] [[minister of religion|minister]]. Following his conversion and especially his ordination, Davis began to express a preference for inspirational gospel music.
 
  
===Later life===
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===New York and later career===
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In 1937, Davis married [[Annie Bell Wright]]. As the blues scene in Durham began to decline, the couple migrated to Mamaroneck, [[New York]], and soon moved to 169th Street in [[Harlem]]. Davis became a minister of the [[Missionary Baptist Church|Missionary Baptist Connection Church]] in Harlem.
  
In the 1940s, the blues scene in Durham began to decline and Davis migrated to [[New York City]]. By the 1960s, he had become known as the "[[Harlem]] Street Singer" and also acquired a reputation as ''the'' person to see if you wanted to learn to play guitar. The [[Roots revival|folk revival]] of the 1960s re-invigorated Davis' career, culminating in an performance at the [[Newport Folk Festival]] and the recording by [[Peter, Paul and Mary]] of "Samson & Delilah." Also known as "If I Had My Way," it was originally a [[Blind Willie Johnson]] recording that Davis had popularized.
+
He began to record once again in 1945, but no longer sang blues songs at all, considering the blues to be the "[[Devil]]'s music." However, he continued to perform in the "[[gospel blues]]" tradition, and many of his songs were not specifically religious, such as  
 +
"Death Don't Have No Mercy" and "Motherless Children." He also displayed his guitar skills on various instrumental tunes with a [[ragtime]] flavor.  
 +
 
 +
The folk music revival of the 1960s boosted Davis' career significantly, although unlike many other early bluesmen, he had continued recording during the late 40s and 50s. His unique guitar style found numerous enthusiastic adherents, such as [[David Van Ronk]], [[Taj Mahal]], [[Ry Cooder]], [[Jorma Kaukonen]], and [[Stefan Grossman]]. [[Peter, Paul, and Mary]]'s cover version of his song "Samson & Delilah"—also known as "If I Had My Way"—further helped his recording career. Davis became a regular feature at the large folk festivals of the 1960s and a popular performer at major folk venues from [[New York City]] to [[Los Angeles]]. He also toured [[Europe]] during this time.
 +
 
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In the late 1960s, the aging Davis settled in Jamacia, [[Queens borough|Queens]], New York and began living a more retired life, performing locally in the New York and [[New Jersey]] but no longer touring. He suffered a [[myocardial infarction|heart attack]] while on the way to a performance in New Jersey on May 5, 1972, and soon died. He is buried in Rockville Cemetery in Lynbrook, New York.
 +
 
 +
==Musical style==
 +
While many blues players also performed in the gospel tradition, Gary Davis made [[gospel blues]] his special art. His singing, often overlooked because of his genius as a guitarist, represented the truest expression of his soul as a performer, with his guitar providing both a rhythmic and melodic counterpoint. He had a tremendous emotional range in his delivery, moving from shrieks and shouts to whispers and pleading. His singing ranged from the joy of sure [[salvation]] to the mourning of a child without his mother, to [[prophet]]ic warnings of [[God]] "muddying the water" in the coming [[day of judgment]].
 +
 
 +
Davis was a powerful and multidimensional singer, and his guitar playing marked him as an instrumental genius. While some other players sought to imitate [[ragtime]] [[piano]] patterns on the guitar, no one succeeded better than Davis. His style of [[finger-picking]] did not follow the normal patters of alternating [[bass]] lines or dampened chords played with the thumb while the fingers play a simplified melodic pattern. Instead, Davis used a complex combination of cross-picking, unusual [[chord]] inversions, and counterpoint to create a style that was all his own. It is rarely duplicated effectively, especially in combination with powerful singing such as his. His accomplishment as a guitarist is all the more impressive given the fact that his style required him often to move up and down the neck of his [[guitar]] without the use of the sense of sight. Particularly memorable, though less technically difficult, were the many charming dialogs he carried out with his guitar, asking it questions, requesting that it repeat itself, telling it not to cry, or creating special effects such as [[harmonics]], slaps, knocks, playing with his left hand only, and imitating the sound of a [[snare drum]].
  
 
==Legacy==
 
==Legacy==
Blind Gary Davis was a finger-picking guitarist who created a unique picking approach which has influenced performers such as [[Jerry Garcia]], [[Stefan Grossman]] and [[Dave Van Ronk]].  Davis also excelled in sacred music to accompany his religious career and his religious works have been re-created by individuals such as the [[Grateful Dead]] and [[Bob Dylan]]Davis would put his sermons into musical segments and sing his sermons which became better remembered by the congregation than if they were spoken to. Davis' legacy was his ability to communicate his religious ideas within a popular musical form and to illustrate his guitar playing with a tremendous finger picking technique.
+
Reverend Gary Davis made hundreds of recordings and left an important legacy for guitarists. No serious student of rock or blues [[guitar]] fails to be impressed by his genius as a instrumentalist, and those who attempt to master his style are invariably challenged by his technical accomplishment. "He was the most fantastic guitarist I'd ever seen," said [[Dave Van Ronk]], who in turn was a major influence on the guitar playing of [[Bob Dylan]]. [[Bob Weir]] said that Davis "taught me, by example, to completely throw out my preconceptions of what can or can't be done on the guitar."
 +
 
 +
Often overlooked, however, is the legacy that Davis left as a singer of spiritual songs and [[gospel blues]]. His versions of "Twelve Gates to the City," "If I Had My Way (Samson and Delilah)," "Death Don't Have No Mercy," and "Motherless Children," for example, are classics, and his renditions of hundreds of traditional gospel songs rarely fail to create a response from those who listen to them closely. Few performers can match the level of artistry he achieved in combing the power of gospel singing, the emotional tonality of the blues, and a true creative genius on the guitar. Beyond his significance as a performer and teacher, it may be his greatest legacy that Reverend Davis introduced a generation of [[folk music]] fans, who previously had no interest in [[gospel music]], to this important musical genre.
  
==Discography==
+
==Select discography==
Many of the records were published posthumously.
+
Many of these records were published posthumously.
*''Little More Faith'', [[Bluesville Records]], Dec. 1961
+
*''Little More Faith,'' Bluesville, 1961
*''Blind Reverend Gary Davis'', Bluesville, Oct. 1962
+
*''Blind Reverend Gary Davis,'' Bluesville, 1962
*''Pure Religion'', Command, July 1964, (re-released in 1970s by Prestige)
+
*''Pure Religion,'' Command, 1964; Prestige, 1970s
*''Blind Reverend Gary Davis'', (different album of same name), Prestige, May 1964
+
*''Blind Reverend Gary Davis,'' (different album from same title above), Prestige, 1964
*''Singing Reverend'', Stimson, (with [[Sonny Terry]])
+
*''Singing Reverend,'' Stimson, (with [[Sonny Terry]])
*''Guitar & Banjo'', Prestige, 1970s
+
*''Guitar & Banjo,'' Prestige, 1970s
*''Ragtime Guitar'', Kicking Mule
+
*''Ragtime Guitar,'' Kicking Mule
*''Lo I Be with You Always'', Kicking Mule
+
*''Lo I Be with You Always,'' Kicking Mule
*''Children of Zion'', Kicking Mule
+
*''Children of Zion,'' Kicking Mule
*''Let Us Get Together'', Kicking Mule
+
*''Let Us Get Together,'' Kicking Mule
*''Lord I Wish I Could See'', Biograph
+
*''Lord I Wish I Could See,'' Biograph
*''Reverend Gary Davis'', Biograph
+
*''Reverend Gary Davis,'' Biograph
*Compilation CD in 1991: ''Pure Religion and Bad Company''
+
*''Pure Religion and Bad Company,'' Compilation CD, 1991
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
* Coclanis, Peter A.; Bruchey, Stuart Weems, ''Ideas, ideologies and socail movements: the United States experience since 1800'', Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1999. ISBN 1-570-03313-7
+
* Grossman, Stefan. ''Rev. Gary Davis/Blues Guitar.'' New York: Oak Publications, 1974. ISBN 9780825601521.
* Davis, Gary, ''Rev. Blind Gary Davis complete recorded works 1935-1949 in chronological order'', Vienna, Austria: Document Records, 1991. OCLC 26636793
+
* Stambler, Irwin, and Grelun Lyndon. ''Folk and Blues, The Encyclopedia.'' New York: St. Martin's Press, 2001. ISBN 9780312200572.
* David, Gary, ''The guitar evangelists, Vol 2'', London: JSP Records, 2006. OCLC 71142712
+
* Tilling, Robert. ''"Oh, What a Beautiful City:" A Tribute to the Reverend Gary Davis (1896-1972): Gospel, Blues, and Ragtime''. Jersey: Paul Mill Press, 1992. ISBN 9780952060901.
* Terry, Sonny; Davis, Gary, ''Sonny Terry & his mouth harp [and] Blind Gary Davis, the singing reverend'', Narbeth, PA: Collectables, 1995. OCLC 34427752
 
* Stambler, Irwin; Lyndon, Grelun, ''Folk and Blues, The Encyclopedia'', New York: St. Martin's Press, 2001. OCLC 20865
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
* [http://www.revgarydavis.com/ RevGaryDavis.com], a site devoted to Gary Davis.  Retrieved October 4, 2007.
+
All links retrieved December 8, 2022.
* [http://www.roybookbinder.com/ RoyBookBinder.com], Roy Book Binder's official site.  Retrieved October 4, 2007.
+
 
* [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:mu6qoa9abijx~T1 Davis biography on AllMusic.com] Retrieved October 4, 2007.
+
* [http://www.revgarydavis.com/ GaryDavis web site] ''www.revgarydavis.com''
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* [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:mu6qoa9abijx~T1 Davis biography] ''www.allmusic.com'' 
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* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3_Hbuf6FEoY Rev. Gary Davis plays "Slow Drag / Cincinnati Flow Rag" ]
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[[Category:Musicians]]
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[[category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
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[[category:music]]
  
[[Category:Music]]
 
[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
 
  
 
{{Credit|129414701}}
 
{{Credit|129414701}}

Latest revision as of 19:59, 8 December 2022

Reverend Gary Davis, also known as Blind Gary Davis (April 30, 1896 – May 5, 1972), was an blues and gospel singer, as well as a renowned guitarist. The best known example of the "gospel blues," his playing influenced several of the rock and roll legends of the 1960s.

Born in rural South Carolina, Davis was almost totally blind from infancy. He taught himself guitar at an early age and soon became an active player in the Piedmont blues scene. He was ordained as a Baptist minister in 1933, and first recorded for the American Record Company (ARC) in 1935. Davis moved with his wife, Annie Bell, to New York in 1940, where he continued teaching guitar, singing, working as a minister, and, beginning in 1945, recording on a fairly regular basis. His career reached new levels of success during the folk revival of the 1960s, and his song, "If I Had My Way," was featured on Peter, Paul, and Mary's chart-topping debut album.

Davis' location in New York City placed him in a position to teach a number of young musicians who went on to make a major mark in the folk and rock music scenes. His unique, virtuoso finger-picking style was influential on many subsequent artists, and his students included Jorma Kaukonen, Stefan Grossman, Dave Van Ronk, and Bob Weir. He also had a significant impact on such artists as the Grateful Dead, Hot Tuna, Bob Dylan, Keb Mo, and Resurrection Band. Few of his students claim to have mastered his style, which is highly complex, creative, and difficult to duplicate. As a singer and preacher, Davis left a legacy of hundreds of spiritual and gospel songs, while his reputation as a guitar genius served to introduce millions of young folk music fans to gospel music.

Biography

Early years

Born in Laurens, South Carolina, to John and Evelina Davis. Davis reported as an adult that his blindness resulted from a misapplication of chemicals to his eyes after birth. By the age of only three weeks he had almost completely lost the ability to see. However, he was able to distinguish light from darkness and discern shapes to a degree, but not to recognize people with his eyes alone. One of eight children, he was raised on a farm in the Piedmont section of South Carolina, the home of a particular style of blues playing also called "Piedmont." His grandmother was his primary caregiver.

Gary became interested in music while still a small boy. At the age of seven, he reportedly built a guitar out of a pie pan and taught himself to play. He claims that no one taught him to play and that he "worked it all out myself." In his teenage years, Davis played at local dances and picnics, both for white and black audiences, and also sang in church. In the 1920s, he attended the Cedar Springs School for Blind People in Spartanburg, South Carolina and learned to read Braille. He also played in a local string band there.

Around this time, Davis broke his left wrist from a fall suffered when he slipped. The wrist was set improperly, and did not heal correctly. Some observers believe this condition may account for his unusual chord patterns and manner of holding the neck of his guitar. In any case, for Davis, the guitar assumed a unique, multi-voice style, playing not only ragtime and blues tunes, but also traditional and original tunes using both chordal harmonies and counterpoint with a unique finger-picking guitar style.

Davis married in the mid 1920s and traveled throughout the Carolinas and Tennessee playing and teaching guitar to make his living. By 1927, he had settled in Durham, North Carolina. While there, Davis collaborated with a number of other artists in the Piedmont blues scene, including Blind Boy Fuller and Bull City Red. He also become more serious about religion, receiving his ordination as a minister in the Baptist church in 1933. He personally founded three churches in the Durham area during this time, but separated from his wife after learning of her alleged promiscuity.

In 1935, a store manager named J.B. Long introduced Davis to the American Record Company (ARC). The subsequent recording sessions marked the beginning of Davis' larger career. It was for the ARC that Davis made his first trip to New York City. There, he recorded 15 sides in the summer of 1935. Although he recorded some secular blues songs, Davis already expressed a preference for gospel music and spirituals, although his music always showed a definite blues influence. Davis would not record again until 1945.

New York and later career

In 1937, Davis married Annie Bell Wright. As the blues scene in Durham began to decline, the couple migrated to Mamaroneck, New York, and soon moved to 169th Street in Harlem. Davis became a minister of the Missionary Baptist Connection Church in Harlem.

He began to record once again in 1945, but no longer sang blues songs at all, considering the blues to be the "Devil's music." However, he continued to perform in the "gospel blues" tradition, and many of his songs were not specifically religious, such as "Death Don't Have No Mercy" and "Motherless Children." He also displayed his guitar skills on various instrumental tunes with a ragtime flavor.

The folk music revival of the 1960s boosted Davis' career significantly, although unlike many other early bluesmen, he had continued recording during the late 40s and 50s. His unique guitar style found numerous enthusiastic adherents, such as David Van Ronk, Taj Mahal, Ry Cooder, Jorma Kaukonen, and Stefan Grossman. Peter, Paul, and Mary's cover version of his song "Samson & Delilah"—also known as "If I Had My Way"—further helped his recording career. Davis became a regular feature at the large folk festivals of the 1960s and a popular performer at major folk venues from New York City to Los Angeles. He also toured Europe during this time.

In the late 1960s, the aging Davis settled in Jamacia, Queens, New York and began living a more retired life, performing locally in the New York and New Jersey but no longer touring. He suffered a heart attack while on the way to a performance in New Jersey on May 5, 1972, and soon died. He is buried in Rockville Cemetery in Lynbrook, New York.

Musical style

While many blues players also performed in the gospel tradition, Gary Davis made gospel blues his special art. His singing, often overlooked because of his genius as a guitarist, represented the truest expression of his soul as a performer, with his guitar providing both a rhythmic and melodic counterpoint. He had a tremendous emotional range in his delivery, moving from shrieks and shouts to whispers and pleading. His singing ranged from the joy of sure salvation to the mourning of a child without his mother, to prophetic warnings of God "muddying the water" in the coming day of judgment.

Davis was a powerful and multidimensional singer, and his guitar playing marked him as an instrumental genius. While some other players sought to imitate ragtime piano patterns on the guitar, no one succeeded better than Davis. His style of finger-picking did not follow the normal patters of alternating bass lines or dampened chords played with the thumb while the fingers play a simplified melodic pattern. Instead, Davis used a complex combination of cross-picking, unusual chord inversions, and counterpoint to create a style that was all his own. It is rarely duplicated effectively, especially in combination with powerful singing such as his. His accomplishment as a guitarist is all the more impressive given the fact that his style required him often to move up and down the neck of his guitar without the use of the sense of sight. Particularly memorable, though less technically difficult, were the many charming dialogs he carried out with his guitar, asking it questions, requesting that it repeat itself, telling it not to cry, or creating special effects such as harmonics, slaps, knocks, playing with his left hand only, and imitating the sound of a snare drum.

Legacy

Reverend Gary Davis made hundreds of recordings and left an important legacy for guitarists. No serious student of rock or blues guitar fails to be impressed by his genius as a instrumentalist, and those who attempt to master his style are invariably challenged by his technical accomplishment. "He was the most fantastic guitarist I'd ever seen," said Dave Van Ronk, who in turn was a major influence on the guitar playing of Bob Dylan. Bob Weir said that Davis "taught me, by example, to completely throw out my preconceptions of what can or can't be done on the guitar."

Often overlooked, however, is the legacy that Davis left as a singer of spiritual songs and gospel blues. His versions of "Twelve Gates to the City," "If I Had My Way (Samson and Delilah)," "Death Don't Have No Mercy," and "Motherless Children," for example, are classics, and his renditions of hundreds of traditional gospel songs rarely fail to create a response from those who listen to them closely. Few performers can match the level of artistry he achieved in combing the power of gospel singing, the emotional tonality of the blues, and a true creative genius on the guitar. Beyond his significance as a performer and teacher, it may be his greatest legacy that Reverend Davis introduced a generation of folk music fans, who previously had no interest in gospel music, to this important musical genre.

Select discography

Many of these records were published posthumously.

  • Little More Faith, Bluesville, 1961
  • Blind Reverend Gary Davis, Bluesville, 1962
  • Pure Religion, Command, 1964; Prestige, 1970s
  • Blind Reverend Gary Davis, (different album from same title above), Prestige, 1964
  • Singing Reverend, Stimson, (with Sonny Terry)
  • Guitar & Banjo, Prestige, 1970s
  • Ragtime Guitar, Kicking Mule
  • Lo I Be with You Always, Kicking Mule
  • Children of Zion, Kicking Mule
  • Let Us Get Together, Kicking Mule
  • Lord I Wish I Could See, Biograph
  • Reverend Gary Davis, Biograph
  • Pure Religion and Bad Company, Compilation CD, 1991

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Grossman, Stefan. Rev. Gary Davis/Blues Guitar. New York: Oak Publications, 1974. ISBN 9780825601521.
  • Stambler, Irwin, and Grelun Lyndon. Folk and Blues, The Encyclopedia. New York: St. Martin's Press, 2001. ISBN 9780312200572.
  • Tilling, Robert. "Oh, What a Beautiful City:" A Tribute to the Reverend Gary Davis (1896-1972): Gospel, Blues, and Ragtime. Jersey: Paul Mill Press, 1992. ISBN 9780952060901.

External links

All links retrieved December 8, 2022.


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